Two atoms, separated both in space and time can be bound together using entanglement.
Entangle is an implementation of Neil Fraser’s Differential Sync algorithm using
core.async
for Clojure and Clojurescript. It currently depends on a forked
version of clj-diff (for Clojure & Clojurescript cross compatibility).
(require ['entagle.core :as e]
['clojure.core.async :as a])
(def atom-a (atom ""))
(def atom-b (atom ""))
(def a<-b (a/chan))
(def a->b (a/chan))
(e/start-sync atom-a a<-b a->b :atom-a)
(e/start-sync atom-b a->b a<-b :atom-b)
(reset! atom-a "FOO")
; some time later
(= @atom-b "FOO)
;=> true
How hard would it be to create a library that performed synchronization of state in the background? This sounds very useful for real-time collaborative web applications. Building this for Clojure seems really useful because it can target both client and server.
Clojure provides alot of interesting features which make building this type of functionality easier. In particular:
- Reference Types
- Clojure reference types like
atom
provide an excellent abstraction for working with state. Watches work transparently and developers work with synchronization usingreset!
andupdate!
as usual. This is essentially the Observer Pattern in the standard library. - Write Once, Run Everywhere
- Clojure/Script targets more than the JVM which is useful when working on web application clients that run in Javascript
- CSP style semantics
- This library is heavily event-driven, and
core.async
makes modelling event loops simpler. It’s lightweight concurrency also abstracts away the lack of threading in Javascript.
lein with-profile uberjar uberjar
Copyright © 2015 rymndhng
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.